The fact is, raising thresholds was party policy in the 1990s, then put back on the agenda when Chris Huhne made it the central plank of his Leadership campaign in February 2006.

Curious, I thought I’d do a quick fact-check. Here’s what I found:

Lib Dem manifesto 1997:Break open the poverty trap. We will take nearly 500,000 low earners out of income tax altogether by raising tax thresholds. This will provide lower taxes and new incentives to work, while cutting the benefits bill and reducing tax for 99.5 per cent of all income taxpayers. This will be paid for by introducing a new top tax rate of 5Op on taxable income of over £100,000 per year.

Radical tax plan (14 Jan 2006)
An outsider in the race for the Liberal Democrat leadership will float a radical plan today to free thousands of people from income tax by hiking up levies on polluting industry.
Chris Huhne will tell a Lib Dem conference in London that increasing charges on industry such as the Climate Change Levy could raise enough money to increase the income tax threshold to the level of the National Minimum Wage – currently around £10,500 a year.

So there you go… Success, of course, has many parents. And for all I know the policy may well pre-date the 1990s: anyone know?

Finally worth mentioning that this isn’t a policy unique to the Lib Dems. In 2001, Margaret Thatcher’s favourite think-tank, Centre for Policy Studies, published a pamphlet, Poor People! Stop Paying Tax!, co-authored by Maurice Saatchi (yes, the very same), which argued pithily:

The government first taxes people on low incomes. Then it means-tests their income. Then it offers them benefits to restore their income back to where it was before they paid the tax. Then, finally, it taxes some of the benefits. A radical simplification is needed in which the tangled web of benefits and credits is simply exchanged for lower tax. In this proposal, the personal income tax allowance (the threshold at which you start paying tax) is dramatically raised from £4,385 to £10,000.

Such thinking never entered the Tory mainstream, though. It took the Lib Dems entering government finally to deliver this long-standing pledge.

6 Comments

Great post, thanks. Of course there had been debates about the benefit of the allowance increase vs other measures.
And there was for a time the green tax switch promoted by the party – 4p off income tax ?

Not that I want to annoy people, but here’s a quote from the Orange Book (2004), p41:

David Laws: […] Where next for the Liberal Democrats? […]
“Simplifying the tax system to create a more logical and comprehensible system, with less ‘breaks’ and lower tax rates; abolishing regressive taxes such as council tax, and taking more low earners out of income tax.”

@Simon McGrath
“Worth remembering how many in the party were against tax cuts originally ”

So, I presume you are in favour of tax-cuts on their own then without replacing the revenue stream? So which public services are you in favour of doing away with to pay for your tax-cuts and how are you unaware that we have something called a deficit?

Lizzie Jewkes is a executive member of Women Liberal Democrats ( WLD). She ran the WLD tax policy table at the LSE manifesto day in Spring 2009 .This idea came up and received a lot of support.She then didn’t drop it but took it to a regional conference, discussed it ,and worked it up as a policy motion with the help of Jo Swinson’s office.It was supported by WLD at Autumn conference and ultimately passed into the party manifesto.
Of course success has many parents, but I think that Lizzie Jewkes and Women Liberal Democrats can be given some credit for being the midwives of this policy!

When Nick became leader he announced our new tax policy would be to reduce the standard tax rate to 16p/£1. This was all duly voted through at the 2008 Autumn Conference. I didn’t hear one speech suggesting that instead we should be raising the threshold. All these people who now claim it was their idea were silent on that day. It was only after I suggested the idea to WLD and they took it to the LSE policy day that suddenly it became quite so popular.

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